maximumpower
On these forums there was post about Melodyne and Sonar. In that thread, someone posted a link to a key shifted, Riders on the Storm video. I liked it so I searched for more and found Losing My Religion and Nothing Else Matters. I think the idea is pretty cool and interesting to here what is going on and how minor/major shifts can change the feel of a song.
How do they shift the key of those songs? I know they are probably using software tools, such as Melodyne, but do they have access to the individual tracks or are they somehow doing it on the mastered versions?
Thanks
You can do it both ways. Within the project individually or on the file to be mastered. The great thing about some of this pitch algorithms (especially Melodyne DNA) is they are creating them with less to 0 artifacts that the human ear can hear. Even something as prehistoric as Adobe Audition's pitch abilities work incredibly well. I use this stuff all the time for my cover band.
Just about everyone tunes a half step down...we stay at 440, so just about every tune we learn (especially our Van Halen stuff) is half a step down. So for quick learning of tunes so I don't have to adjust my tuning, Adobe works perfectly for me on an entire tune.
We also do an 8 song Metallica medley that I came up with to where we alter the tunings from the original. When I was putting the arrangement together, I grabbed each section of each song and tuned them using Adobe so that everything sounded the way I wanted it to sound and my band could just learn the arrangement as it was without tuning a thing.
Now when I get serious with a client project, I'll use Melodyne DNA on each track for pinpoint accuracy as well as the least chance of artifacts. That's the best way to do something without letting on that you've done a shift in pitch. Everyone should have a copy of Melodyne DNA....to me it's mandatory for things like this and nothing else handles pitch as precise as it does in my opinion.
-Danny